They said on the news that Coakley ran a sloppy campaign. In a state that
was mostly democrats how could the democrat candidate lose? Obviously she
was asleep at the wheel...

On Tue, Jan 19, 2010 at 6:38 PM, Keith Johnson <keithbjohn...@comcast.net>wrote:

>
>
> Aw damn....well, I guess this may be a wakeup call for some of the Dems who
> were still fighting the Prez in stuff like health care.
> Damn...
>
> *************************************
>
> http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/01/19/massachusetts.senate/index.html?hpt=T1
>
> *Boston, Massachusetts (CNN) * -- Republican Scott Brown has won Tuesday's
> special election for the U.S. Senate seat formerly held by liberal Democrat
> Ted Kennedy, CNN projects based on actual results. * *
>
> Brown, a Massachusetts state senator, had 52 percent of the vote to 47
> percent for state Attorney General Martha Coakley, the Democratic contender,
> with over 69 percent of precincts reporting in results from the National
> Election Pool, a consortium of media organizations including CNN.
> Independent candidate Joseph Kennedy, a libertarian who is not related to
> the Kennedy political family of Massachusetts, had 1 percent.
>
> At stake was President Obama's domestic agenda, including health care
> reform.
>
>
> If Brown upsets Coakley, Republicans will strip Democrats of the 60-seat
> Senate supermajority needed to overcome GOP filibusters against future
> Senate action on a broad range of White House priorities.
>
> Final numbers on election turnout are expected "to be pretty good" despite
> the wintry weather, said Brian McNiff, a spokesman for the office of
> Massachusetts Secretary of State Bill Galvin.
>
>
> "I don't think weather is going to impede too many people" from coming out
> to vote, McNiff said Tuesday. "I think the interest in this election will
> trump any bad weather."
>
>
> Galvin predicted Monday as many 2.2 million of the state's 4.5 million
> registered voters would vote -- at least double the turnout from December's
> primary. In one sign of high interest, more than 100,000 absentee ballots
> were requested ahead of the election, according to McNiff.
>
> iReport: Send us your thoughts on the special 
> election<http://www.ireport.com/ir-topic-stories.jspa?topicId=24330>
>
> Coakley was initially expected to easily win the race to replace Sen. Ted
> Kennedy, known as the "liberal lion" of the Senate who made health care
> reform the centerpiece of his nearly 47-year Senate career. Kennedy died of
> brain cancer in August.
>
> Until recently, Brown was underfunded and unknown statewide. In addition,
> no Republican has won a U.S. Senate race in Massachusetts since 1972, and
> Democrats control the governorship, both houses of the state legislature,
> and the state's entire congressional delegation.
>
> The latest poll, however, showed Brown leading Coakley by 7 points, 52 to
> 45 percent. The American Research Group survey, taken Friday through Sunday,
> had a sampling error of plus or minus 4 percentage points. No polls released
> in the past few days showed Coakley ahead.
>
>
> In a sign of the high stakes involved, the Coakley campaign held an
> afternoon news conference Tuesday to complain that voters in three places
> received ballots already marked for Brown.
>
> McNiff confirmed that the secretary of state's offices received two reports
> of voters saying they got pre-marked ballots. The suspect ballots were
> invalidated and the voters received new ballots, McNiff said.
>
> Kevin Conroy, the Coakley campaign manager, said the "disturbing incidents"
> raised questions about the integrity of the election. In response, the Brown
> campaign issued a statement criticizing Coakley's team.
>
>
> "Reports that the Coakley campaign is making reckless accusations regarding
> the integrity of today's election is a reminder that they are a desperate
> campaign," Daniel B. Winslow, the counsel for the Brown campaign, said in
> the statement.
>
>
> Obama has been both "surprised and frustrated" by the race, White House
> Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said Tuesday. Obama and former President Bill
> Clinton hit the campaign trail over the past three days in an attempt to
> save Coakley's campaign, which observers say has been hampered by
> complacency and missteps.
>
> Obama crushed Sen. John McCain in Massachusetts in 2008, beating the GOP
> presidential nominee by 26 points.
>
>
> "If you were fired up in the last election, I need you more fired up in
> this election," Obama urged a crowd at a Coakley campaign rally on Sunday.
>
>
> Vicki Kennedy, the senator's widow, called on state Democrats to turn out
> to save her husband's legacy.
>
> "We need your help. We need your support. We need you to get out there and
> vote on Tuesday," Kennedy said. "We need you to bring your neighbors. We
> need you to bring your friends."
>
> Brown, who has trumpeted his 30 years of service in the National Guard,
> hewed to traditional GOP themes at the end of the campaign. He promised at a
> rally Sunday that, if elected, he would back tax cuts and be tougher on
> terrorists than Coakley.
>
> He also repeated a pledge to oppose Obama's health care reform effort.
>
> "Massachusetts wants real reform and not this trillion-dollar Obama health
> care that is being forced on the American people," he said. "As the 41st
> [Republican] senator I will make sure that we do it better."
>
> Forty-four percent of Massachusetts voters cited the economy and jobs as
> their top concern in a recent 7 News/Suffolk University poll. Thirty-eight
> percent mentioned health care as their top concern.
>
> Voters more concerned with the economy were split almost evenly between the
> two candidates; voters more worried about health care narrowly supported
> Coakley.
>
> Brown's surprising strength came in part because some independents and
> conservatives who have supported Democrats in the past were having second
> thoughts.
>
> Democrats far outnumber Republicans in Massachusetts, but there are more
> independents than Democrats and Republicans combined.
>
>
> Several Democratic sources said multiple Obama advisers have told the party
> they believe Coakley is going to lose. The sources said they still hoped
> Obama's weekend visit to the state, coupled with a late push by party
> activists, could tip the balance in her favor, but Obama aides have grown
> increasingly pessimistic since Friday.
>
> Facing the possibility of Coakley's defeat, Democrats were trying to figure
> out if they could pass health care reform without that crucial 60th Senate
> vote. But top White House aides publicly insisted they are not engaging in
> any talk of contingency plans, because they believe Coakley will come out on
> top Tuesday.
>
> The seat is currently held by former Kennedy aide and longtime friend Paul
> Kirk, who was appointed to the seat on an interim basis.
>
>
> Galvin, the Democratic secretary of state, said last week that certifying
> Tuesday's election results could take more than two weeks -- potentially
> enough time to allow congressional Democrats to pass a final health care
> bill before Brown is seated, if he should win.
>
> But multiple Democratic sources said this is unlikely. Even if House and
> Senate Democrats could reach a deal to meld their bills and pass them in the
> next couple of weeks, there would be a huge outcry from not only
> Republicans, but also an increasingly distrustful public if they appeared to
> be rushing it through.
>
> Two Democratic sources in close contact with the White House told CNN on
> Monday they've urged the administration, in the event of a Brown victory, to
> push House Democrats to pass the Senate's health care bill as currently
> written. Doing so would prevent the plan from having to be taken up by the
> Senate again.
>
> "I think the Senate bill clearly is better than nothing," House Majority
> Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Maryland, said Tuesday.
>
>
> A third option would be for Democrats to revisit the idea of trying to push
> health care through the Senate with only 51 votes -- a simple majority.
>
> But to do that Democrats would have to use a process known as
> reconciliation, which presents technical and procedural issues that would
> delay the process for a long time. A number of Democrats are eager to put
> the health care debate behind them and move on to economic issues such as
> job creation as soon as possible this election year.
>
> Senate Democrats could also try again to get moderate GOP Sen. Olympia
> Snowe of Maine to vote for a compromise health reform plan. Multiple
> Democratic sources, however, have said they believe that is unlikely now.
>
>
>
> 




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